Chapter 3.
Ā Becoming the Villainās Secretary (3)
āAlright, enough personal questions. Letās handle official work now, shall we?ā
I cut him off, making it clear I wasnāt going to say anything more.
When I deliberately avoided his gaze and turned toward the stack of documents he had already signed, Helwid watched me for a moment and then let out a languid sigh.
He was finally backing off.
ā¦Or so I thought.
āVery well, then. I shall assign official duties to my secretary.ā
āYour Majesty, how long do you plan on calling me āSecretaryā like that?ā
āUntil my secretary says she will spend her whole life working as my secretary?ā
Helwid teased me with a gentle smile.
Yeah, sure. Call me that for a hundred yearsāyouāll never get me to say Iāll work for you forever.
When I narrowed my eyes at him, the emperor seemed amused.
āNow, this is truly official business. Deliver the signed documents to the Magic Tower Operations Support Division and the Imperial Welfare Division. On your way back, stop by the Fire Safety Division and pick up their new equipment purchase list. And also go to the Imperial Library and fetch the annals written by AnsentiaāYear 531 of the Imperial Calendar.ā
My jaw dropped at how eagerly he piled tasks onto me.
āHold on. Deliveries, receiving forms, book requestsāthose can all be done via communication stones! Why do I have toāā
āOh? Is my secretary slow on the news? There was an intruder in the imperial palace at dawn. In my office.ā
That was definitely a lie.
But I couldnāt just say, Thatās a lie, isnāt it?
āN-no, stillā¦ā
āThere is no one trustworthy in the Imperial Palace. Which is why I must rely on my diligent secretaryāwho never engages in personal conversation and only does her work.ā
Helwid smiled radiantly, almost blindingly so.
Wow. Look at this petty tyrant.
When I stared at him in disbelief, he jerked his chin toward the door, as if telling me to hurry up and leave.
Even his playful, arrogant chin tilt radiated the aura of someone sitting on the peak of powerāthe emperor.
He may keep calling me āsecretary,ā but at the end of the day, heās still the emperorāand my boss.
Ugh. I swear, I will resign someday.
With an exaggerated sigh, I stood up.
āThatās exactly what I expect from my secretary. So dependableāno personal chit-chat, only business.ā
I glared at him while grabbing the documents and holding them close to my chest.
āSafe travels,ā he said.
In a tone that sounded like it belonged to a cranky old man rather than someone who ascended the throne at twenty-six.
I shot him one last murderous glare and left the office, slamming the door behind me.
Through the closed door, I could hear him laughingālike he found all this unbearably entertaining.
He became emperor at such a young age, always chasing his fatherās shadowāI knew that much.
But seeing someone so young and stunningly handsome talk like an old man was⦠strange.
He didnāt need to act that way to be cool. Whatever. Not my business.
When I arrived at the Magic Tower Operations Support Division, I finally realized it.
Helwid had tangled up my route on purpose.
If I followed his directions, Iād end up walking back and forth across the palace for no reason.
And if I came back late? Heād definitely nag me for being slow.
So I changed the order. Instead of visiting the Imperial Welfare Division first, I headed for the closest locationāthe Imperial Library.
After scanning my fingerprint on the entrance scanner, I stepped inside.
Silence.
No librarian. No visitors. No one at all.
āThatās weird⦠The Imperial Library might be quiet, but never this emptyā¦ā
Even my footsteps felt too loud in the suffocating silence.
Then suddenly, a sentence flashed in my mind.
āWhen the imperial princeāborn of the late emperorās beloved concubineāstudied in the Imperial Library, he allowed no one inside.ā
It was a line from the original novel I transmigrated into, ćDark. Secret. Romanceć.
Why did that pop into my head now?
I froze mid-step.
At a sunlit table sat a young boyāalmost unreal, like a painting.
Had he sensed my presence?
He slowly turned his head and met my gaze straight on.
Soft rosy cheeks, violet eyes so clear they gleamed, honey-blonde hair like melted gold in the sunlight.
Indelis Gleis.
The prince who, together with the male lead, would overthrow the villain Helwidābecome emperorāand execute him.
My breath caught.
The next line of the novel flashed in my head.
āThreatened even by his own brother, he found solace in the empty imperial library, where he tested the limits of his mind.ā
Oh.
Oh no.
Of course the library was empty.
Everyone had been chased out.
Indelis stared at me like a suspicious intruder, then put down the fountain pen in his small hand.
āAn unfamiliar face.ā
His voice was still that of a boy who hadnāt hit pubertyābut his bearing carried the dignity of a prince.
At some point, a guard approached from behind him, drawing his sword at me.
Indelis lifted a tiny hand and stopped him.
āNo need.ā
āBut she could be the intruder from last night.ā
Intruder? Was that story⦠actually real?
āShe’s dressed formally. Likely a government worker.ā
At his words, the guard reluctantly withdrew.
I almost fainted on the spot.
Indelis looked straight at me.
āYou. Come here.ā
He crooked a single finger at me.
Being summoned by a kid half my size with just a finger was⦠surreal. But I obeyed.
Lowering his head back over his book, he said,
āI do not know you. But you seem to know me.ā
Why does everyone in the imperial family talk like this?
Basically: āHey. You know who I am, donāt you?ā
āAnd you seem to know how I⦠deal with uninvited guests.ā
His violet eyes sharpened.
āIāI acknowledge the seriousness of my offense.ā
I bowed deeply.
āMy offense, you sayā¦ā
Dignity, prideānone of that mattered. My life did.
āI cannot let that go easily.ā
When I risked glancing up, he was smilingālike a cat whoād spotted a new toy.
I nearly forgot that this adorable child would one day kill his brother and become emperor.
āI wonāt ask why you came here.ā
āThank you!!ā
I looked up, relievedāonly to see him resting his chin on his hand, smirking like, You actually believed that?
āBut.ā
But?
āIf you solve a problem I could not solve.ā
Indelis smiled with pure, dazzling innocence.
Oh hell.
In the novel, this kid was a freakish genius.
Brilliant, ruthless, and clever enough to wash away the label of ātyrantās murdererā by the finale.
And he couldnāt solve it?
āWhat if⦠I canāt solve itā¦?ā
āYou may choose.ā
Indelis spoke pleasantly.
āHanging or quartering.ā
ā¦Fantastic.
There was only one choice if I wanted to live.
Fine. Heās eight. I can do this.
I was second in my country. I got into pre-med.
I can do this.
āP-please show me the problem.ā
āOh?ā
Eyes bright with interest, he handed over a workbook.
I leaned forward to read the page he pointed at.
āāFrom three cards labeled 1, 1, and 2, two cards are drawn simultaneously. Let X be the sum of the numbers on the cards. Find V(X).ā ā¦Seriously.ā
Heād been struggling with a senior-year, science-track probability problem.
Heās eight.
Meanwhile Iāqueen of paid tutoringāwas saved by math yet again.
I picked up the fountain pen and wrote without hesitation.
āSo if we define X as the sum of the two drawn numbers, the possible values are 2 and 3, meaningāā
He stared at me in disbelief.
Then, scowling, he flipped to another page.
āThen what about this?ā
āāFor a binomial distribution X ~ B(n, p), if P(X = 0) = P(X = n) and V(X) = 30, what is n?ā Oh, this oneāsāā
His face went blank.
I tucked my hair behind my ear and kept writing.
āIf itās a binomial distribution, the events are independent. nC0Ā·pā°Ā·qāæ equals nCnĀ·pāæĀ·qā°.ā
I continued smoothly.
āAnd since the variance is 30, npq = 30. Meaning n = 120.ā
Clean.
Maybe difficult for an eight-year-old prodigy⦠but to a perfect-score math student like me? Childās play.
Indelis stared, mouth open like a confused chick, eyes darting between me and the solved problem.
The prodigyāone of the greatest geniuses since the founding of the empireāhad just been outdone by some random nobody who seemingly came out of nowhere.